An American is among eight people wounded when a car bomb exploded outside the U.S. Consulate in the Iraqi city of Erbil, a State Department official and Kurdish medical official said. Two people were killed in the blast.
An explosion just went off followed by gun fire. Not sure what's up yet. pic.twitter.com/mxAAJSF1Xd
— Talmage (@talmagepayne) April 17, 2015
Dr. Zawand Al Rasheed of Erbil’s West Emergency Hospital said the eight wounded were brought to his hospital after the explosion, which occurred around 5:40 p.m. Three of the eight wounded will remain at his hospital overnight, but he said none of the patients held overnight have life-threatening injuries. The identities of the two dead are unclear.
Rasheed said the American woman is a teacher at a local primary school. The director of the school visited the hospital earlier and identified the woman as American, Rasheed said,
Rasheed said the woman suffered second-degree burns, is in stable condition, and will “most probably” be discharged Saturday.
An Iraqi-based supporter of the terror group ISIS said on Twitter that ISIS is responsible for the attack. ISIS has not officially claimed responsibility, but the supporter is prominent and has released unreported details about previous ISIS-linked attacks, according to Flashpoint Intelligence, a security company and NBC News partner.
Talmadge Payne, an American working as a consultant for a non-government organization in Erbil, told NBC News that he was sitting on the roof of his hotel, about a half-mile from the consulate, and felt the blast.
“If I could feel the blast from here it must have been pretty significant,” he said. “The room shook, and a few things fell off the shelves.”
He said there was a firefight, then about 10 minutes of calm, then more gunfire.
The Associated Press, citing one of its reporters at the scene, said that the blast set nearby cars on fire.








